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Search Results 4511 to 4520 of 6569

  • Old Series Trademark No. 0224

    Bouquet Whiskey

    Date: 1872

  • Old Series Trademark No. 1601

    Kentucky Belle

    Date: 1888

  • Memo on Conditions in Tulare County

    Office Memorandum from Lois Craig to Margaret S. Watkins regarding incarceration

    Date: April 3, 1942

  • Old Series Trademark No. 1390

    Farragut House

    Date: 1886

  • McCarthy Album 09, Photograph 254

    Caption: "Camp Curry- Yosemite," c. 1917. Yosemite's Half Dome Village, established by David and Jennie Curry in 1899, was originally called Camp Curry, and later Curry Village. It was designed to provide cheaper accommodations for Yosemite tourists than the resort hotels. The couple rented out furnished tents and provided amenities such as a dining tent. As time progressed, the amenities increased, and some hard-sided cabins created. This photograph shows a bustling scene around a large wood cabin with a wide covered porch. As a result of a legal dispute over trademarked names in the park, Curry Village changed its name to Half Dome Village in 2016.

    Date: 1917

  • McCarthy Album 11, Photograph 263

    Caption: "Studebaker Factory. South Bend, Indiana. Sept. 13, 1934." Two buildings of the Studebaker Factory in South Bend are visible in this photograph. The Studebaker brothers started operations in South Bend in 1852, when they established a blacksmith shop and foundry. They soon began building wagons and carriages, demand for which soared with the advent of the Civil War and an increase in migration toward and into the American West. The company gradually phased out wagon production in favor of automobile manufacture in the early twentieth century. Sales declined after World War II, leading to the eventual closure of the factory in 1963.

    Date: 9/13/1934

  • McCarthy Album 06, Photograph 159

    No Caption: The photograph has a hand-written inscription stating: "Portola Electric Bell Copyright 1909 Pillsbury Picture Co. No. 800." Installed on the intersection of Third and Market Streets in San Francisco, the Portola Electric Bell contained two thousand bulbs and rose 125 feet above the street. It was part of the Portola Festival of 1909, a grand celebration devised to commemorate the discovery of San Francisco Bay by Gaspar De Portola, and for the public to celebrate the future of the rebuilt city after the 1906 earthquake and fires.

    Date: 1909

  • Old Series Trademark No. 0907

    Sunny Slope

    Date: 1882

  • Old Series Trademark No. 2992

    Crown Creamery

    Date: 1897

  • Old Series Trademark No. 2123

    Eureka Tea

    Date: 1892